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Japanese sawshark

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Class
  
Chondrichthyes

Order
  
Pristiophoriformes

Scientific name
  
Pristiophorus japonicus

Phylum
  
Chordata

Subclass
  
Elasmobranchii

Family
  
Pristiophoridae

Rank
  
Species

Japanese sawshark Japanese sawshark Pristiophorus japonicus YouTube

Similar
  
Pristiophorus, Shortnose sawshark, Bahamas sawshark, Longnose sawshark, Sixgill sawshark

Japanese sawshark


The Japanese sawshark (Pristiophorus japonicus) is a species of sawshark in the family Pristiophoridae. This shark has a long, narrow rostrum. Its first dorsal fin originates behind the tips of the pectoral fins, and its caudal fin is angled almost straight in line with the body. The Japanese sawshark reaches an maximum length of up to 1.36 m (4 ft 6 in).

Contents

Japanese sawshark Cool Sharks Of The World Like The Japanese Sawshark Shark Sider

japanese sawshark pristiophorus japonicus


Range and Habitat

Japanese sawshark Cool Sharks Of The World Like The Japanese Sawshark Shark Sider

Found in the northwest Pacific Ocean around Japan, Korea, and northern China between latitudes 48°N and 22°N. It is found over the sandy or muddy bottoms of the continental shelf at depths of 50 to 800 m (160 to 2,620 ft). This species may vertically migrate in the water column because of changes in temperature.

Behavior

Japanese sawshark httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The Japanese sawshark has a varied diet of small benthic organisms. Like seemingly all sawsharks, this species is ovoviviparous. After an unknown gestation period, the female shark gives live birth to around 12 pups. These pups average around 30 cm (12 in) long. At sexual maturity the male is 80 to 100 cm (31 to 39 in) long, and the female is around 100 cm (39 in) long.

Conservation

Japanese sawshark Japanese Sawshark YouTube

With little information on population size or frequency of bycatch, the Japanese sawshark is listed by the IUCN Red List as being Data Deficient. It is not clear if this shark's apparent rarity is because of natural reasons, or because the population has already been depleted. Due to its benthic lifestyle, and because the range of this shark is heavily fished, it is safe to assume that the Japanese sawshark is at considerable risk of being caught as bycatch in bottom trawling and gillnet operations. Because of its habitat and behavior, this shark poses no threat to humans.

Japanese sawshark Sawshark Pictures Photos Images Searches SeaPicscom

References

Japanese sawshark Wikipedia